You have to specify a language (i.e., English). If you leave it out, the browser won’thyphenate. If you specify the wrong language, the browser will still add hyphens, butweird things may happen. Note: you can specify language on elements other than the<html> element, if you have more than one language on a particular page.

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Why Typography? Websites are about
getting information to people, and that’s mostly done through text. So you need to make sure that your text is as easy to read as possible.

Media Queries A website can
have as many media queries as you want. Add a media query where something needs to change - even if it’s a small thing. Don’t think of responsive websites as being made up of a few separate designs (one-column, two-column, etc.). Think of responsive websites as a range of changes across all viewport widths. Typography media queries don’t need to happen at the same breakpoints as layout changes.

<h1>Heading</h1> <h2>Subheading</h2> <p>This is a
paragraph</p> It’s important to use the correct elements. For very old browsers/devices that don’t support CSS, they’ll still be able to display text using browser defaults. This is also important for accessibility.

Reference pixels aren’t even the
same size on every device. This is 320 pixels viewed on an iPhone and on a laptop screen, held next to each other. http://m.ew.com

Setting Font Size Two alternatives
for font size: ems and rems.You probably know these in the context of converting from pixels. But it’s also possible (and more responsive) to start with responsive units and not use pixels at all.

html { font-size: 100%; }
Base font size for the page - 100% is the browser’s default font size for body text - what the browser thinks is a good reading size for that device. It’s not the same for every browser, but currently most computers/devices use 16 pixels. In the future, that may not be the case. By using responsive units now, you’re making your site more likely to look good on future devices.

Starting with the browser default
base size makes the site more readable for everybody, even if the text may seem too large to some users (or to the designer). http://alistapart.com

Line Height (leading) If lines
are too close together/far apart, text is more difﬁcult to read. It’s called leading because in lead typesetting, they would put pieces of lead between lines to add space.

45 75 One easy way
to test: count from 45th to 75th character on the ﬁrst line, and use a span to color it.

<p>These stories are true. Although
I have left <span class=”testing”>the strict line of historical</span> truth in many places, the animals in this book were all real characters.</p> .testing { color: #f00; } You can easily turn this on an off in your CSS during designing/testing.

But this is even easier:
after my talk at CSS Dev Conference, Chris Coyier made this bookmarklet that does the same thing — colors the text red between the 45th-75th characters in any text element. No need to change your HTML or CSS. http://codepen.io/chriscoyier/pen/atebf

Add the bookmarklet to your
browser’s bookmarks. Click it, then hover over the element you want to select — it will be outlined in red...

And click to select that
element. The 45th-75th characters will be colored red, and will stay red as you change the size of the browser window (unless you refresh the page.)

@media screen and (min-width:40em) {
article { font-size: 1.1em } } Media query to increase font size, from 1 em up to 1.1 em. Larger fonts will look okay on larger screens. It’s better to include more media queries with small changes in each one than to use only a few media queries and make dramatic jumps in font size.

This is the page at
slightly more than 40 ems, with a bigger font size. We changed the font size on the <article> element, so everything inside it is bigger (both paragraph text and heading). Alternatively, you could just change the <p> font size and leave the heading the same.

Since the font size is
larger, and we’re on a wider screen, it would look better if we increased the line height a bit.

@media screen and (min-width:55em) {
article { font-size: 1.2em } p { line-height: 1.5 } } Add line height to the media query. Only increase the line height for the <p> (paragraph text), not everything in <article>, because the heading line height doesn’t need to change.

#content { max-width: 63em; }
Eventually the font size is the largest you want to make it, and you want to keep the content from getting any wider. Use max-width so layout stops expanding for super-wide screens.You can use max-width on individual columns, or on an element that contains all your content.

@media screen and (min-width: 75em)
and (min-height: 31.25em) { body {font-size: 150%;} } At 75 ems, a media query increases the font size, but only if screen is tall enough (so not for wide laptop screens where the vertical space is taken up with lots of browser toolbars)

On iPhone it’s even worse.
It wouldn’t be a good idea to make this particular typeface smaller (it would be hard to read), but you could use a media query to change the typeface on narrow screens. Also, don’t use all caps for long sections of text like this.

Further down the page, the
text is 80% of the browser default. It’s pretty small. I had trouble reading it, and wanted to zoom in on my phone’s screen...

The left example has no
hyphenation, the right has hyphenation. On left, look at second-to-last line, the words look too spaced out. Hyphenation is most important on small screens, to maximize use of space.

p { -webkit-hyphens: auto; -moz-hyphens:
auto; -ms-hyphens: auto; hyphens: auto; } The hyphen property is new, so you need preﬁxes. Opera and Chrome don’t support hyphenation at all, but that’s okay. This is an example of progressive enhancement. Hyphens make the design better for browsers that can support it, but the design is still perfectly okay for users with browsers that don’t support hyphenation.

<html lang=”en-US”> You have to
specify a language (i.e., English). If you leave it out, the browser won’t hyphenate. If you specify the wrong language, the browser will still add hyphens, but weird things may happen. Note: you can specify language on elements other than the <html> element, if you have more than one language on a particular page.